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2006-08-29 03:16:59 · 16 answers · asked by ? 2 in Entertainment & Music Polls & Surveys

16 answers

I was interested in this question too and so did some research, I hope it helps...

Immediately after the Declaration of War with England in 1812, Elbert Anderson of New York, then a contractor, visited Troy where he purchased a quantity of provisions. The Inspectors of the articles of that place were Ebenezer and Samuel Wilson; the latter gentleman universally known as Uncle Sam, generally superintended in person a large number of workmen who were on this occasion employed in overhauling the provisions purchased by the contractor. The casks were marked E. A. U. S., the inspection fell to the lot of a facetious fellow, who being asked the meaning of the marks said he did not know, unless it meant Elbert Anderson and Uncle Sam, alluding to Uncle Sam Wilson. The joke took among the workmen and passed currently, and Uncle Sam when present was often rallied by them on the increasing extent of his possessions.

—Copied from the Great Centennial, published by the Centennial Art Journal.


Uncle Sam was the eldest of five children of Ebenezer Wilson and Annie Austin, born at Taunton, Mass., January 22, 1772. His father served in the Revolutionary War, at the close of which he removed to Pittstown, Rensellaer County, New York, where his family was raised. Uncle Sam married Chloe Brown by whom he raised three sons, Samuel, Austin, and Alfred. He lived in Pittstown, owning flour mills, a water course running through the farm. Upon his first wife’s death he married Charlotte Nutting Reed by whom he raised four children, Ebenezer Vespasian Wilson, (the noted E. V. Wilson of Spiritualistic notoriety,) David J. Wilson, Jacob and Pauline Wilson, twin children.

Uncle Sam held the office of Major in the War of 1812, his epaulettes being still in the possession of his daughter. In the early part of the war he furnished a quantity of flour for Elbert Anderson, and in this way his name became connected with the government. In 1824 he removed to Verona, Oneida County, New York, there spending the remaining days of his life, passing to spirit life, September 3, 1844, his mortal remains are interred in the old graveyard at Oneida Valley.

Compiled by his daughter,
PAULINE WILSON STEPHENS.

2006-08-29 03:21:33 · answer #1 · answered by Alfa Female 4 · 0 0

Uncle SAm

2006-08-29 03:18:39 · answer #2 · answered by wolfmettle 3 · 0 0

The government is Uncle Sam

2006-08-29 03:18:35 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

They don't. They call the US Government Uncle Sam.

2006-08-29 03:18:12 · answer #4 · answered by ndtaya 6 · 0 0

as stated above Uncle Sam refers to the government.

britain has an equivalent -John Bull. Sam might have been based on Bull. the characters were used to represent the government in newspaper cartoons, political and editorial back in the 1800's, well before WWI, WWII.


many political cartoons featuring Uncle Sam here. in the early days he looked different than today. he got his present day look in about 1876.
http://loc.harpweek.com/LCPoliticalCartoons/AdvancedSearchList.asp

2006-08-29 03:24:52 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

What is the origin of Uncle Sam, the cartoon character symbolizing the U.S.? Any relation to Sam Hill, as in what the S.H.? -- Anonymous, Denver

Dear Anonymous:

Hill, no. Sam Hill is just a soundalike euphemism for "hell" once used by macho American frontiersmen in the presence of women, children, and other sensitive souls. Uncle Sam is a whole different story.

A widely held belief, reported as fact in supposedly reliable reference books, is that the original Uncle Sam was one Sam Wilson, a meat packer in Troy, New York, who supplied rations to the U.S. military during the War of 1812. Wilson was a subcontractor to one Elbert Anderson, and the letters "E.A.--U.S." were stamped on all the pair's army-bound grub. On being asked what the letters stood for (the abbreviation U.S. supposedly was unfamiliar at the time), one of Sam's workers joshed that it stood for "Elbert Anderson and Uncle Sam," meaning the jovial Wilson himself.

The joke was quickly picked up by Wilson's other employees. Many of these men later served in the army during the war, and the story spread from there. This tale appears to have first found its way into print in 1842.

Very neat, but is it true? On the surface it might seem so. Researchers have established that Elbert Anderson and Sam Wilson did exist and did supply meat to the government during the War of 1812. What's more, the earliest known reference to Uncle Sam in the sense of the U.S. government appeared in 1813 in the Troy Post.

But there are reasons to doubt. For one thing, the Uncle Sam = Sam Wilson story didn't see print until 30 years after the event, which seems suspiciously tardy. Second, the notion that someone in 1812 would have to ask what "U.S." stood for is hard to swallow--the available evidence shows that the initials were then in common use.

Third, there's something odd about the newspaper evidence. Sam Wilson was a leading citizen of Troy, New York. Yet none of the newspapers in his hometown seem to have had any knowledge of his connection to Uncle Sam until very late in the day. The 1813 reference in the Troy Post says nothing about Wilson, noting merely that "the letters U.S. on the government waggons, &c are supposed to have given rise to [Uncle Sam]."

In 1816 the Post reprinted a story from Philadelphia claiming that Uncle Sam originated in the initials USLD, meaning United States Light Dragoons, a regiment of which had been formed in 1807. The account said that on being asked what the USLD on their caps stood for, the soldiers said "Uncle Sam's Lazy Dogs." In 1817 the Post took up the matter again, this time reverting to the original explanation that Uncle Sam was simply a jocular expansion of the letters U.S.

When Sam Wilson died in 1854, none of the newspaper obituaries by Troy writers mentioned the Uncle Sam connection. Significantly, however, two obituaries reprinted from Albany newspapers did talk about Uncle Sam. This suggests that the legend was concocted by out-of-towners with no firsthand knowledge of the facts.

So where did Uncle Sam originate? Nobody knows for sure, but it's likely the original explanation in the Troy Post was correct: there was never an actual Uncle Sam; instead the name was just a wiseguy expansion of the initials U.S.

It's worth noting that all the early references to Uncle Sam appeared in "peace" newspapers--that is, papers opposed to the War of 1812--and in every case the usage was derisive. This suggests Uncle Sam was dreamed up by critics of the government who simply wanted to personify the object of their scorn.

I don't doubt, however, that the Sam Wilson story will live on. All the dissenting facts above were set down by antiquarian Albert Matthews in 1908, for God's sake, and you see what headway they've made. Pit truth against a plausible legend and the truth hits the mat every time.

2006-08-29 03:22:14 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

dear happy,

This was used as a recruiting tool, during world war two. A caricature wearing a top hat and dressed in our flags colors point towards the reader of a newspaper,brochure etc. The figure (uncle Sam) stated "I want you"

2006-08-29 03:24:02 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

US=uncle sam,history duh!!learn more even if u dont wanna b a geek

2006-08-29 03:19:34 · answer #8 · answered by D 4 · 0 0

it is not USA the reference to Uncle Sam is to the US goverment.

2006-08-29 03:18:54 · answer #9 · answered by TheZeon 2 · 0 0

Uncle Sam is more of a representation of the american spirit that surfaced durring WW II... or was it WW I i don't remember now.

2006-08-29 03:20:09 · answer #10 · answered by Jenessa 5 · 0 0

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